The Pentagon’s $1.4B Rare Earth Gamble: Betting on Yesterday’s Problem

Nov 5, 2025

Highlights

  • The Pentagon invested $700 million in Vulcan Elements and ReElement Technologies shortly after China suspended rare earth export controls.
  • Both funded companies face significant viability challenges:
    • Vulcan has government orders covering less than 1% of its capacity.
    • ReElement must scale recycling operations by October 2026 when China's export suspension expires.
  • MP Materials emerges as a quiet winner:
    • Holds an existing Department of Defense (DoD) stake.
    • Benefits from price protections.
    • Positioned to profit whether the new entrants succeed or fail.

Just three days after Beijing lifted its rare earth export controls, the Pentagon committed $700 million in loans and equity warrants to Vulcan Elements and ReElement Technologies — a move that may already be outdated. Announced on November 3, 2025, the $1.4 billion public-private partnership was framed as a decisive strike to “end China’s dominance” over magnet supply.

Yet the timing undermines the rationale. On October 30, following trade negotiations between President Trump and Xi Jinping, China agreed to suspend its export restrictions for one year. The Pentagon’s investment assumes those controls remain — a contradiction that raises the question: Is Washington financing a crisis that no longer exists?

A Supply Chain Built on Political Assumptions

As reported by stock analysis site Benzinga (opens in a new tab), Vulcan Elements, barely two years old, has committed to producing 10,000 metric tons of rare earth magnets per year, but government orders cover less than 1% of that capacity. If Chinese exports normalize and prices drop 30–50%, Vulcan’s commercial viability becomes doubtful without an ongoing subsidy. And hence the whole point of the concept of a decades-long critical mineral and rare earth element industrial policy.

ReElement Technologies, funded to recycle rare earth oxides, faces an even steeper challenge: global recycling rates for these metals remain below 1%, and magnet recovery infrastructure is embryonic. Scaling a competitive operation by the October 2026 deadline — when China’s export suspension expires — may be wishful thinking, suggests the stock site.

The Defense Department’s warrants in both firms create potential conflicts of interest: the government becomes both regulator and shareholder, incentivized to prop up valuations even if operations fail to achieve market efficiency.

Winners, Losers, and What to Watch

The quiet winner here is MP Materials (NYSE: MP). With an existing 15% DoD stake and price floor protection, MP stands to benefit whether new entrants succeed or falter. If Vulcan collapses, procurement shifts to MP. If Vulcan thrives, MP sells feedstock to ReElement — either way, MP cashes in.

Key dates to monitor:

  • Q2 2026: Vulcan’s 10-K customer concentration — if >70% revenue from DoD, risk of artificial market support.
  • October 2026: Beijing’s decision on export controls — the event that will make or break this deal.
  • 2028 U.S. election: Potential reversal of government equity stakes.

REEx Critical Take

The Pentagon’s Vulcan-ReElement funding package reflects industrial urgency but strategic impatience. By locking in commitments before diplomatic clarity, Washington risks creating state-subsidized dependence rather than competitive resilience.  

Now Rare Earth Exchanges has promoted an unprecedented critical mineral and rare earth element industrial policy out of Washington DC—but without that, the funded companies face significant risks.

So the deal highlights how the U.S. remains reactive to China’s industrial strategy rather than predictive of it.

Investors should temper optimism. Until Chinese policy, pricing, and demand stabilize, rare earth equities are trading on politics, not profit.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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